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Frank Layden

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Name
  
Frank Layden

Role
  
Basketball Coach


Spouse
  
Barbara Layden

Education
  
Frank Layden 1990 October Frank Laydenjpg


Born
  
January 5, 1932 (age 92) (
1932-01-05
)

Occupation
  
NCAA collegiate and NBA coach and General Manager

Years active
  
1956-1988 as coach, 1978-present as Utah Jazz team president and GM

Children
  
Scott Layden, Katie Layden, Mike Layden

Awards
  
Similar People
  
Scott Layden, Mark Eaton, Darrell Griffith, Karl Malone, Deron Williams

Frank layden coaching file


Francis Layden (born January 5, 1932) is a retired American basketball coach and executive of the National Basketball Association's Utah Jazz.

Contents

Frank Layden Frank Layden advice NHL could use Rockmonster Unplugged

Frank layden former head coach of niagara university and the utah jazz


Coaching career

In addition to his coaching at the professional level, Layden coached at Adelphi Suffolk College and

is also a former head coach and player of his alma mater Niagara University's basketball team. Layden coached Niagara to its first NCAA tournament appearance in 1970, with the help of Calvin Murphy. In 1976 he was hired to be an assistant coach with the NBA's Atlanta Hawks joining former Niagara teammate Hubie Brown. In 1979 he was hired to be the General Manager of the then New Orleans Jazz, and became the head coach of the Jazz (now in Salt Lake City) in 1981, replacing Tom Nissalke. He coached the Jazz for the next seven and a half years. He was instrumental in drafting and signing franchise mainstays John Stockton and Karl Malone to the club. He retired from coaching during the 1988–1989 season, moving into the team's front office and was replaced as coach by his assistant, Jerry Sloan.

In 1984, Layden was awarded the NBA's Coach of the Year. That same season, he also won the NBA's Executive of the Year and the NBA's J. Walter Kennedy Citizenship Awards. (He and Joe O'Toole are the only non-players in NBA history to win the award).

Layden joined the Utah Eagles of the Continental Basketball Association in October 2006 as an honorary assistant coach.

Retirement

Layden retired from coaching the Jazz in 1989 to serve full-time as the franchise team president and general manager, hiring former NBA player and then Jazz assistant Jerry Sloan as the new head coach. During this time, Layden participated with Marv Albert in a video published by Sports Illustrated called Dazzling Dunks and Basketball Bloopers, as well as a sequel to that a year later. Layden once served briefly as a consultant for the New York Knicks, where his son Scott Layden served as general manager for a time. He continues to live with his wife, Barbara, in Salt Lake City. Layden was the head coach of the Utah Starzz WNBA team from 1998 through 1999.

References

Frank Layden Wikipedia


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